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Wednesday, March 29, 2017

As I dusted the other day, I straightened a stack of old
story books. On top was one of our son’s favorites as a toddler—Tootle by
Gertrude Crampton. It is the tale of Tootle, a baby locomotive, who is
attending train school. His schoolwork includes tasks such as stopping at red
flags and pulling a dining car without spilling the soup. His most important
lesson is that he must stay on the rails.

One day when Tootle is chugging along, he hops off the
tracks to play in the meadow with a horse he sees there. He likes it so much he
makes a habit of it. His instructor, Bill finds out about Tootle’s escapades
and comes up with a plan to get the little engine back on the tracks. Bill
places red flags throughout the grasses. Red flags signal that a train must
stop—something engines never like to do. Tootle learns his lesson and at the
end of the book we see an older and wiser Tootle teaching some new locomotives about
staying on the rails.

Often during my prayer personal prayer time, I find myself
acting a lot like Tootle—getting off track. The slightest distraction can lure
me away from my time with Jesus. A stray thought can become my focus. The need
to plan for an upcoming event can wheedle its way into my prayers. A worry can
become a mantra instead of a prayer. At times getting reconnected with Jesus
feels like I am trying to wrestle the weight of a locomotive back on the
tracks.

As I researched ideas for staying on task during prayer, I
realized that most if not all Christians struggle with this problem. Sifting
through the many articles on the subject, I found several common suggestions to
help us keep our spiritual wheels on the prayer tracks:

Shut the door.
Find a quiet place and a quiet time—out of the hustle and bustle of the
household. Maybe it is while walking; perhaps it is in the bathtub. For you it
might be early morning while for someone else it may be after the rest of the household has
gone to bed.

Use ready-made
prayers as a guide. When the disciples asked Jesus how they should pray, He
gave them the Lord's Prayer. There is no harm in praying a pre-written prayer,
whether it's from the Bible or your favorite devotional. I personally like the
guided prayer times in SacredSpace.ie and Walk Thru the Bible’s “Quiet Walk”.

Read Scripture beforehand.
Reading scripture before your prayers, especially scripture about prayer, like
Philippians 4:6, Romans 8:26 or Ephesians 6:18, will remind you why you're
praying in the first place and motivate you to get the most out of your prayer
time.

Play music. For
me, quiet instrumental music helps me stay focused while at the same time opening
my mind to what God is saying and doing.

Speak. Praying
aloud reinforces that prayer is a conversation. Thinking and hearing prayers can keep us in dialogue
with God. I especially like to sing the praise portion of my prayers. For some
reason singing connects my heart to Jesus.

Journal. You can
either write as you're praying or wait until you're finished, then write a
summary of your experience as a reference for next time. Write without
restrictions—don’t worry about spelling, grammar, or structure. For some journaling takes the form of art,
sketching a little doodle that expresses what you are saying and hearing in
prayer.

How about you? Do you struggle to stay focused during prayer?
When your mind wanders, how do you get back on track? What are the “red flags”
that stop these errant thoughts and turn your heart back to the Lord?

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Have you heard the old adage, “Church is a hospital for sinners not a hotel for saints,”? A discussion at a recent Bible study I attended got me thinking about it
once again. What IS the baseline, nitty-gritty purpose of the Church?

Acts 2 talks about the formation of what has since become
known as the church. “All the believers continued together in close fellowship
and shared their belongings with one another. They would sell their property
and possessions, and distribute the money among all, according to what each one
needed. 46 Day after day they met as a group in the Temple, and they had their
meals together in their homes, eating with glad and humble hearts, praising
God, and enjoying the good will of all the people. And every day the Lord added
to their group those who were being saved.” (Acts 2:44-47)

It seems to me that the early church formed to minister to
those who had come to believe in Jesus as the Messiah, the Savior. These
believers then went out and witnessed to those who did not yet know Christ as
Savior. Those people then became believers, joined in the church fellowship,
and, in turn, witnessed to other unbelievers. “And every day the Lord added to
their group those who were being saved.”

In our Bible study, one of my fellow attendees, Paul, summed
it up: “The church ‘within the building’ is here to equip believers to live for
Jesus so that we can be the church ‘outside the building’, enabling us to reach
out to others and bring them to Christ.”

Jill, another Bible study member, shared, “I see the church like
a fire where I bring my poker to get it red hot so I can go out and light other
fires. I need to regularly be coming back to the church—to the fire—to renew
my fervor—to get my poker hot again.”

What is the mission statement of your church? What are YOUR
ideas on the purpose of the Church?

P.S. My blogging friend, Floyd, reminded me how easy it is to get diverted from God’s purpose for the Church. Sometimes even our good
intentions can get us sidetracked--feeding the hungry without sharing our
spiritual Bread of Life, providing shelter for the homeless without showing
them the way to our eternal Home, visiting the sick without offering hope from
the Healer, etc. All of these ways of ministering are good and needful, but
unless we are also clearly and consistently sharing the Good News of Salvation
with the people we serve, we are failing to fulfill our purpose as the Church.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Over 20 inches of snow in less than 24 hours! Life in
our area ground to a halt overnight. That much snow in so short a time is
overwhelming, and yet—beautiful beyond measure.

For me, the weather event offers a rare opportunity to slow
down, breath deep, and enjoy the quiet. Sipping a cup of steaming tea while gazing
out the sliding glass doors at the pristine landscape developing before our
eyes; watching
the birds flock to our porch for sunflower seeds, imprinting the surface of
the snow with their tiny little tracks; and working together with my husband on
a jigsaw puzzle that creates a lovely picture from a handful of misshapen pieces—all
gifts from God that would go unappreciated except for the down-time brought on
by the blizzard of ‘17.

For others, the thick blanket of white transforms an
ordinary hill or a common backyard into a chance for amusement that rivals
Disney with all its wonder. I love what my sister wrote on Facebook, “Had a
great day today. It's the simple things in life that mean the most. Our [family]
enjoyed sledding and riding Pappy's four-wheeler. We had alot of fun and the
kids giggled and played together. So very thankful for our family. Joe and I
both agreed tonight that it's not the expensive things in life that matter. It's
who you spend even the simple, down-to-earth times with that means the most. We
are so glad our families are close and so glad we have each other! Thank you,
Jesus, for each one of them!”

I shared with him my philosophy on things that happen that I
wish hadn’t—This too, shall pass. “Don't
be discouraged. Just think, next week the snow will all be gone. And next month
you will be able to get your jeep out!”

For some, like my friend, the godsends of a snowstorm don’t
start till it ends.

We’ve all lived through weather events that impacted our lives
in out-of-the-ordinary ways. How did you spend your time? What blessings did
God blanket you with because of it?

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

I can still hear Mr. Spayd, our band director, drilling the
percussionists in our band, while the rest of us waited. At the time, I didn’t
realize how important drummers were. I just found them exasperating. After all,
how hard could it be to feel the beat and tap the drumhead with a stick? (At
times, I think Mr. Spayd was tempted to take the stick and “tap” a few “heads”
himself.) 😊

I later realized that the entire tempo of a piece in marching
band is set by the drummers. Drummers give the instrumentalists our cues and
provide the steady beat that keeps us all together. If the drum section gets
lost, rushes, lags, or otherwise flubs up, the entire band follows suit.

From Mr. Spayd’s little aside lessons to the drummers, I
learned a few drum terms—tap, rolls produce a sustained, continuous sound, paradiddle.
I loved that word! To me, it sounded a lot like what it meant—two single
strokes followed by a double stroke, i.e., Right-Left-Right.-Right—paradiddle! Many
of our songs in marching band were introduced by “Tap, Tap, Tap. Tap, Tap, Tap. Paradiddle, Paradiddle. Tap,
Tap, Tap”.

Along with all the other rudimentary drum skills, paradiddles
help build muscle memory. Paradiddles enable drummers to emphasize or articulate
different words and syllables and accents.

In developing as a Christian, just as in becoming a better
percussionist, there are some fundamentals for me to learn that set the “rhythm”
for my walk with Jesus. There is the basic Tap, Tap, Tap, of praying consistently.
There is the continuous Roll of new insights He will unveil as I study His Word.
And there are the blessed Paradiddles of faith-sharing, when God, through
fellowship and witnessing, emphasizes the importance and blessings of walking
with Him.

Above all is following our Director—keeping our eyes fixed on
Jesus. He is the One who knows the pace He wants us to take and who can help us
get back on track when we get lost.

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

Do you
observe Ash Wednesday? While many of us may attend worship services on that day
and receive ashes on our foreheads or hands, how many of us realize that Ash
Wednesday is really all about repentance—not about giving up chocolate, abstaining
from electronics, or promising to pray more?

At its root,
Ash Wednesday signals the beginning of a season of intentional awareness of our
need for repentance. Repentance is absolutely necessary when meeting God. To
repent means to change our minds. Repentance involves a turning from sin, with contrition—mourning
and regret for those wrongs, to God.

At
Patheos.com, Jack Wellman explains repentance as “kind of like heading out for
a drive down the freeway but realizing we went down the wrong way and traffic
is coming straight at us. We need to turn around and go the other way. That is
what it basically means to repent. We are headed down the wrong way—the way to
hell—and we need to change our minds and turn around and go the other way.”

Most of us
have tried living our life without God. In a recent devotion from Quiet Walk, (a
free resource of walkthru.org), the author wrote, “to repent, we must change our
minds about [God]. We must stop thinking of Him as something less than the Sovereign
Lord of the universe. We must acknowledge God’s right to define what is right
and wrong for us.”

We must
trust God to reconcile us to Himself, to make peace with our Heavenly Father,
through His Son, Jesus Christ. Jesus’ death on the cross paid the penalty for
all the wrongs we have committed. But it is up to us whether or not we will turn
from our sins and accept what Jesus did in our place.

As we
journey over these next 40 days leading up to Easter, may this be the year we
truly make a U-turn. May we realize, with great sorrow and remorse, that we have
been living a sin-filled, self-serving life and may we make a turnaround and
speed toward God and His merciful forgiveness through Jesus.

“Turn your
old life in for a kingdom life. The real action comes next: [Jesus], the main
character in this drama, will ignite the kingdom life within you, a fire within
you, the Holy Spirit within you, changing you from the inside out. He’s going
to clean house—make a clean sweep of your lives. He’ll place everything true in
its proper place before God.”